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Bruce Springsteen - Greatest Hits(more) »rank: 435002by: Bruce Springsteen
: :About as complete a selection of fan and artist favorites as any single-disc Bruce collection could be, this is a surprisingly coherent listen given the many stylistic and attitudinal shifts it charts. The inclusion of only four of Born in the U.S.A.'s seven Top 10 entries leaves space for less obvious choices like 'Atlantic City' and four new cuts, among them songs recorded by a briefly reunited E Street Band. The pace lags a bit near the end--'Secret Garden' is turgid enough to take its place on a Sting album--but Greatest Hits earns its place in the car CD player with stuff like ... |
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Sticky Fingers(more) »rank: 463069by: The Rolling Stones
: essential recording:'Sister Morphine,' the heart of guitarist Mick Taylor's first full studio album with the Stones, doesn't get the airplay of 'Brown Sugar' or 'Wild Horses.' But it's one of the most vivid, horrifying songs about drug abuse ever recorded--as Mick Jagger sings 'from my hospital bed,' the ringing guitars of Taylor and Keith Richards build to full catharsis behind him. On that and lighter songs like the countryish 'Dead Flowers' and the rocker 'Bitch,' Charlie Watts establishes himself as rock's prototypical drummer. He's creative and propulsive and knows how to swing, but he never overwhelms the song or the other Stones. ... |
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Classic Singles Collection(more) »rank: 28442by: Jimi Hendrix
: essential recording:'Sister Morphine,' the heart of guitarist Mick Taylor's first full studio album with the Stones, doesn't get the airplay of 'Brown Sugar' or 'Wild Horses.' But it's one of the most vivid, horrifying songs about drug abuse ever recorded--as Mick Jagger sings 'from my hospital bed,' the ringing guitars of Taylor and Keith Richards build to full catharsis behind him. On that and lighter songs like the countryish 'Dead Flowers' and the rocker 'Bitch,' Charlie Watts establishes himself as rock's prototypical drummer. He's creative and propulsive and knows how to swing, but he never overwhelms the song or the other Stones. ... |
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Hotel California(more) »rank: 479368by: Eagles
:Album Description:From the original master tapes on 24 karat Gold disc. Booklet includes complete original artwork. Standard jewel case. essential recording:It's no accident that The Eagles Greatest Hits might one day pass Michael Jackson's Thriller as the best-selling album of all time-- the Eagles made great singles. By contrast, their albums could be spotty and strained by self-conscious artistry. Hotel California was arguably the band's best single album--it was certainly the Eagles' biggest original disc-- and it also underscored the band's need to make a big statement. The title tune reflected the album's theme of paradise lost in California, painting this picture ... |
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Through The Past, Darkly (Big Hits Vol. 2)(more) »rank: 594300by: The Rolling Stones
: :This second greatest hits collection serves up the band's classic mid- '60s period, capped off by the death of Brian Jones for whom this collection is dedicated. Having made their breakthrough with hits that challenged the status quo, the Stones were in no mood to calm down. The insistent chaos of 'Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing in the Shadow?' 'Jumping Jack Flash,' and 'Street Fighting Man' display the Stones at their most powerful, while 'Dandelion' and 'She's a Rainbow' are the Stones succeeding with psychedelia. 'Paint It, Black' and 'Ruby Tuesday' strike a perfect balance. A decent introduction to an essential ... |
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Sleeps with Angels(more) »rank: 554960by: Neil Young & Crazy Horse
: :If Neil Young has a pronounced weakness, it's a lack of focus. Restless to a fault, he's apt to rush into the recording studio without fully forming his ideas. Sleeps with Angels is that kind of album--and yet it's one of his best. Jarred by the death of Kurt Cobain (the rock & roll martyr quoted Young in his suicide note), he dashed off this collection of songs in 1994 with backing from his steadfast electric warriors, Crazy Horse. At least two songs--the title track and 'Change Your Mind'--seem to directly refer to Cobain. Others--'Driveby' and 'Safeway Cart' among the most striking--are mesmerizing ... |
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Exile on Main St.(more) »rank: 133550by: The Rolling Stones
: essential recording:From the swaggering frustration in the first song ('I only get my rocks off while I'm sleeping,' Mick Jagger sings in the hyper 'Rocks Off'), the Stones speed through familiar neighborhoods of country, blues, and R&B on Exile. They never even bother to stop when they've crashed into something. They don't leap into new worlds so much as master the old ones, turning Slim Harpo's blues obscurity 'Hip Shake' into a harp-and-piano steamroller and setting spines a-cracking in 'Ventilator Blues.' Both 'Tumbling Dice' and Keith Richards's 'Happy' have become hits, but the 1972 album is most notable for its overall murky ... |
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Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out!(more) »rank: 66256by: The Rolling Stones
: :Introduced at the beginning of their second live album as 'the greatest rock & roll band in the world,' the Stones come off instead as perhaps the world's sloppiest. Recorded at Madison Square Garden on the first dates of the 1969 tour that would end at Altamont, Ya-Ya's shows our heroes struggling manfully to get comfortable with a stadium-size PA system. Of the nine songs included here, only 'Love in Vain,' 'Stray Cat Blues,' and 'Live with Me' come close to matching the fire of their studio versions; much of the time the band just sounds ragged and distracted. Still, given that it's ... |
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In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida(more) »rank: 540609by: Iron Butterfly
:Album Description:Japanese reissue features 6 tracks packaged in a miniature LP sleeve. Atlantic. 2006. :Iron Butterfly's 1968 album veritably defined the burgeoning genre of hard-rock, primarily by way of its utterly over-the-top title cut. Reportedly composed by keyboardist/lead singer Doug Ingle in such a stoned-out, numb-tongued condition that he couldn't properly pronounce its intended title--'In the Garden of Eden'--the track seemed almost a parody of every excessive inclination of psychedelia. Melodramatic vocals, repetitive riffing, aimless solos--you name it, this 17-minute behemoth had it. Aided by FM DJs who loved to program it in its entirety so they could take 'legitimate' breaks, it became ... |
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The Movie Album(more) »rank: 1199120by: Creedence Clearwater Revival
:Album Description:Japanese reissue features 6 tracks packaged in a miniature LP sleeve. Atlantic. 2006. :Iron Butterfly's 1968 album veritably defined the burgeoning genre of hard-rock, primarily by way of its utterly over-the-top title cut. Reportedly composed by keyboardist/lead singer Doug Ingle in such a stoned-out, numb-tongued condition that he couldn't properly pronounce its intended title--'In the Garden of Eden'--the track seemed almost a parody of every excessive inclination of psychedelia. Melodramatic vocals, repetitive riffing, aimless solos--you name it, this 17-minute behemoth had it. Aided by FM DJs who loved to program it in its entirety so they could take 'legitimate' breaks, it became ... |




